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The One Question Liberals REFUSE to answer

Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?
Of course they do. Now your question has been answered.

So you are against racial quotas, racial set asides in government contracting, college racial goals and slots reserved by race?

Of course you are just being snarky and refusing to see the implications of what you agreed to.

Standard libtard stupidity.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?


Then why are there so many blacks incarcerated? Way beyond their percentage of the US population.

That is a good question. Most of the legal disadvantages for whites are not in criminal law but in tort law, civil rights law and the quota / set aside system of laws that cross the country.

Blacks are being encouraged by the corporate media to act thuggish, ruin their careers with drug convictions and take on behaviors that most people associate with criminality.

Many of the investors that own large chunks of the Hip Hop industry also own private prisons.

Connect the dots, dude.

Who are these investors. Their names please.


Private Prison Industry Profits from Rap Music ColorBlind Me

In the early 1980’s before all of these rappers emerged in the scene, a lot of prison institutions converted from being publicly-funded businesses to private organizations supported by powerful investors of large corporations. Investors derived from industries such as media, music, finance and many more. During this conversion, a rather glamorous business opportunity surfaced, one that would attract major profit for each investor.
Scholars have identified this conversion as the prison industrial complex, which accounts for the increase in prison inmates in order to increase the amount of contracted work for a greater profit. In fact, this billion-dollar industry has been successful in creating thousands of new prison establishments over the last two decades. With more prison establishments warrants more inmates and bigger spending budgets for these private investors.
Coincidentally, during the conversion of public to private prisons, the hip-hop music industry endured a large transformation as well. Prior to the Wayne era, rap and hip-hop music used to be trademarked for its playful and innovative contribution to music. With notorious figures such as Sugarhill Gang, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa and more, hip-hop was a reflection of stylized music that embodied elements of “DJing,” “MCing,” break dancing and “beat-boxing.” Now, hip-hop or rap music rather, mirrors the sounds and lyrics of the “gangsta” lifestyle. With lyrics centered on guns, drug usage and violence, these new hardcore rappers have transformed hip-hop from innocent fun to potential danger.
During a time when the need for more inmates increased, it seems more than a coincidence that rap music would transform into a lifestyle or music medium that evoked violence. As one of the most influential genres of music, “Why would the rap image, as this new and ‘cool’ product reflect a gangster or criminal lifestyle?”
According to the Atlantic Monthly, “Since 1991, the rate of violent crime in the US has fallen by 20% while the number of people in prison or jail has risen by 50%.”
While criminal activity has not been as threatening, still new prisons are continuing to arise, which further requires more inmates in order for the prison industry to sustain as a profitable business. Marketing officials and investors seemed to find an answer to this dilemma with no problem. I mean with the rap industry already thriving well beyond anticipated success, it would only be a matter of time before fans and consumers would personify the associated images of such a cool type of music and lifestyle.
So, those of you, who enjoy the music of Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz, Rick Ross and more, please be careful to distinguish between their imagery and their actual music. With respect to marketing and brand management officials, it is no surprise that targeting ages 9 to 25 will increase the profitability of a product considering our generation is the most influential in the consumer market. By continuing to project and emulate these images of rap artists, listeners and fans are putting money into the pockets of these investors who thrive within this billion-dollar industry.

Who are the biggest investors getting rich off the private prison industry:
Who s Getting Rich off the Prison-Industrial Complex VICE United States
Matt Sirovich and Jeremy Mindich both donate to Democratic politicians and are involved with progressive-leaning organizations like Root Capital, a nonprofit lending company that offers loans to farmers in developing countries to alleviate poverty.
Their day job, however, is running Scopia Capital, a hedge fund that is the one of the largest shareholders of GEO Group. The fund owns about $300 million in shares in that company, which represents 12 percent of its entire portfolio. Like Zoley, they are good at what they do—their fund outperformed the market by 20 percentage points, and the State of New Jersey hired Scopia to manage $150 million worth of pensions....

Democratic party is totally fine with the incarceration rate. Although Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan are largely responsible for the drug-war policies that caused the prison population to skyrocket, Bill Clinton was a “tough on crime” president who continued their ideas. And Vice President Joe Biden was a principal player in the Clinton era’s crime policies—he wrote the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which, among other things, called for $9.7 billion in increased funding for prisons and stiffer penalties for drug offenders.
Though the US prison population is shrinking slightly, the number of inmates in federal lockup is increasing, and while Obama keeps saying he’s ending the war on drugs, he’s also proposed budgets that call for increasing the amount of money spent on the Bureau of Prisons. So it’s not such a stretch that a Democratic donor would also be in the men-in-cages industry....

Oh, yes and likely you as well if you have a 401k plan.

Secret Meeting Created Gangsta Rap Helped Private Prisons

The subject quickly changed as the speaker went on to tell us that the respective companies we represented had invested in a very profitable industry which could become even more rewarding with our active involvement. He explained that the companies we work for had invested millions into the building of privately owned prisons and that our positions of influence in the music industry would actually impact the profitability of these investments. I remember many of us in the group immediately looking at each other in confusion. At the time, I didn’t know what a private prison was but I wasn’t the only one. Sure enough, someone asked what these prisons were and what any of this had to do with us. We were told that these prisons were built by privately owned companies who received funding from the government based on the number of inmates. The more inmates, the more money the government would pay these prisons. It was also made clear to us that since these prisons are privately owned, as they become publicly traded, we’d be able to buy shares. Most of us were taken back by this. Again, a couple of people asked what this had to do with us. At this point, my industry colleague who had first opened the meeting took the floor again and answered our questions. He told us that since our employers had become silent investors in this prison business, it was now in their interest to make sure that these prisons remained filled. Our job would be to help make this happen by marketing music which promotes criminal behavior, rap being the music of choice. He assured us that this would be a great situation for us because rap music was becoming an increasingly profitable market for our companies, and as employee, we’d also be able to buy personal stocks in these prisons. Immediately, silence came over the room. You could have heard a pin drop. I remember looking around to make sure I wasn’t dreaming and saw half of the people with dropped jaws. My daze was interrupted when someone shouted, “Is this a f****** joke?” At this point things became chaotic. Two of the men who were part of the “unfamiliar” group grabbed the man who shouted out and attempted to remove him from the house. A few of us, myself included, tried to intervene. One of them pulled out a gun and we all backed off. They separated us from the crowd and all four of us were escorted outside. My industry colleague who had opened the meeting earlier hurried out to meet us and reminded us that we had signed agreement and would suffer the consequences of speaking about this publicly or even with those who attended the meeting. I asked him why he was involved with something this corrupt and he replied that it was bigger than the music business and nothing we’d want to challenge without risking consequences. We all protested and as he walked back into the house I remember word for word the last thing he said, “It’s out of my hands now. Remember you signed an agreement.” He then closed the door behind him.

The Secret Meeting that Changed Rap Music and Destroyed a Generation Hip Hop Is Read

If you want specific name, then you have to look that up yourself. These investors are into many different forms of business and many of them are invested in both private prisons and rap music (as well as country music, etc.) BUT the decision to turn rap into a gangster format was made early on as a business decision by some who owned investments in both private prisons and rap music specifically.

And it has ripped the hell out of the black community, the result of a slow burn thinly veiled genocide against and enslavement of blacks. It is also ironic how this style of wearing pants low came about. It originated in prions where it was a signal from a sexual partner that plays 'catcher' that he is ready for another sexual encounter. It is amazing to see all these big 'tough' guys walking around signaling to the world that they are ready to take it up their asses and too stupid to know it.

About the prisons for profit. You probably know many of them have contracts with government that guarantee a certain percentage of prisoners, (customers actually.) This in itself should be questioned. City and country governments will naturally increase prosecutions to send "customers" to these prisons. Getting back to the white/black criminal numbers, what better place to shop for future prisoners than the black communities.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?


Then why are there so many blacks incarcerated? Way beyond their percentage of the US population.

That is a good question. Most of the legal disadvantages for whites are not in criminal law but in tort law, civil rights law and the quota / set aside system of laws that cross the country.

Blacks are being encouraged by the corporate media to act thuggish, ruin their careers with drug convictions and take on behaviors that most people associate with criminality.

Many of the investors that own large chunks of the Hip Hop industry also own private prisons.

Connect the dots, dude.

Who are these investors. Their names please.


Private Prison Industry Profits from Rap Music ColorBlind Me

In the early 1980’s before all of these rappers emerged in the scene, a lot of prison institutions converted from being publicly-funded businesses to private organizations supported by powerful investors of large corporations. Investors derived from industries such as media, music, finance and many more. During this conversion, a rather glamorous business opportunity surfaced, one that would attract major profit for each investor.
Scholars have identified this conversion as the prison industrial complex, which accounts for the increase in prison inmates in order to increase the amount of contracted work for a greater profit. In fact, this billion-dollar industry has been successful in creating thousands of new prison establishments over the last two decades. With more prison establishments warrants more inmates and bigger spending budgets for these private investors.
Coincidentally, during the conversion of public to private prisons, the hip-hop music industry endured a large transformation as well. Prior to the Wayne era, rap and hip-hop music used to be trademarked for its playful and innovative contribution to music. With notorious figures such as Sugarhill Gang, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa and more, hip-hop was a reflection of stylized music that embodied elements of “DJing,” “MCing,” break dancing and “beat-boxing.” Now, hip-hop or rap music rather, mirrors the sounds and lyrics of the “gangsta” lifestyle. With lyrics centered on guns, drug usage and violence, these new hardcore rappers have transformed hip-hop from innocent fun to potential danger.
During a time when the need for more inmates increased, it seems more than a coincidence that rap music would transform into a lifestyle or music medium that evoked violence. As one of the most influential genres of music, “Why would the rap image, as this new and ‘cool’ product reflect a gangster or criminal lifestyle?”
According to the Atlantic Monthly, “Since 1991, the rate of violent crime in the US has fallen by 20% while the number of people in prison or jail has risen by 50%.”
While criminal activity has not been as threatening, still new prisons are continuing to arise, which further requires more inmates in order for the prison industry to sustain as a profitable business. Marketing officials and investors seemed to find an answer to this dilemma with no problem. I mean with the rap industry already thriving well beyond anticipated success, it would only be a matter of time before fans and consumers would personify the associated images of such a cool type of music and lifestyle.
So, those of you, who enjoy the music of Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz, Rick Ross and more, please be careful to distinguish between their imagery and their actual music. With respect to marketing and brand management officials, it is no surprise that targeting ages 9 to 25 will increase the profitability of a product considering our generation is the most influential in the consumer market. By continuing to project and emulate these images of rap artists, listeners and fans are putting money into the pockets of these investors who thrive within this billion-dollar industry.

Who are the biggest investors getting rich off the private prison industry:
Who s Getting Rich off the Prison-Industrial Complex VICE United States
Matt Sirovich and Jeremy Mindich both donate to Democratic politicians and are involved with progressive-leaning organizations like Root Capital, a nonprofit lending company that offers loans to farmers in developing countries to alleviate poverty.
Their day job, however, is running Scopia Capital, a hedge fund that is the one of the largest shareholders of GEO Group. The fund owns about $300 million in shares in that company, which represents 12 percent of its entire portfolio. Like Zoley, they are good at what they do—their fund outperformed the market by 20 percentage points, and the State of New Jersey hired Scopia to manage $150 million worth of pensions....

Democratic party is totally fine with the incarceration rate. Although Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan are largely responsible for the drug-war policies that caused the prison population to skyrocket, Bill Clinton was a “tough on crime” president who continued their ideas. And Vice President Joe Biden was a principal player in the Clinton era’s crime policies—he wrote the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which, among other things, called for $9.7 billion in increased funding for prisons and stiffer penalties for drug offenders.
Though the US prison population is shrinking slightly, the number of inmates in federal lockup is increasing, and while Obama keeps saying he’s ending the war on drugs, he’s also proposed budgets that call for increasing the amount of money spent on the Bureau of Prisons. So it’s not such a stretch that a Democratic donor would also be in the men-in-cages industry....

Oh, yes and likely you as well if you have a 401k plan.

Secret Meeting Created Gangsta Rap Helped Private Prisons

The subject quickly changed as the speaker went on to tell us that the respective companies we represented had invested in a very profitable industry which could become even more rewarding with our active involvement. He explained that the companies we work for had invested millions into the building of privately owned prisons and that our positions of influence in the music industry would actually impact the profitability of these investments. I remember many of us in the group immediately looking at each other in confusion. At the time, I didn’t know what a private prison was but I wasn’t the only one. Sure enough, someone asked what these prisons were and what any of this had to do with us. We were told that these prisons were built by privately owned companies who received funding from the government based on the number of inmates. The more inmates, the more money the government would pay these prisons. It was also made clear to us that since these prisons are privately owned, as they become publicly traded, we’d be able to buy shares. Most of us were taken back by this. Again, a couple of people asked what this had to do with us. At this point, my industry colleague who had first opened the meeting took the floor again and answered our questions. He told us that since our employers had become silent investors in this prison business, it was now in their interest to make sure that these prisons remained filled. Our job would be to help make this happen by marketing music which promotes criminal behavior, rap being the music of choice. He assured us that this would be a great situation for us because rap music was becoming an increasingly profitable market for our companies, and as employee, we’d also be able to buy personal stocks in these prisons. Immediately, silence came over the room. You could have heard a pin drop. I remember looking around to make sure I wasn’t dreaming and saw half of the people with dropped jaws. My daze was interrupted when someone shouted, “Is this a f****** joke?” At this point things became chaotic. Two of the men who were part of the “unfamiliar” group grabbed the man who shouted out and attempted to remove him from the house. A few of us, myself included, tried to intervene. One of them pulled out a gun and we all backed off. They separated us from the crowd and all four of us were escorted outside. My industry colleague who had opened the meeting earlier hurried out to meet us and reminded us that we had signed agreement and would suffer the consequences of speaking about this publicly or even with those who attended the meeting. I asked him why he was involved with something this corrupt and he replied that it was bigger than the music business and nothing we’d want to challenge without risking consequences. We all protested and as he walked back into the house I remember word for word the last thing he said, “It’s out of my hands now. Remember you signed an agreement.” He then closed the door behind him.

The Secret Meeting that Changed Rap Music and Destroyed a Generation Hip Hop Is Read

If you want specific name, then you have to look that up yourself. These investors are into many different forms of business and many of them are invested in both private prisons and rap music (as well as country music, etc.) BUT the decision to turn rap into a gangster format was made early on as a business decision by some who owned investments in both private prisons and rap music specifically.

And it has ripped the hell out of the black community, the result of a slow burn thinly veiled genocide against and enslavement of blacks. It is also ironic how this style of wearing pants low came about. It originated in prions where it was a signal from a sexual partner that plays 'catcher' that he is ready for another sexual encounter. It is amazing to see all these big 'tough' guys walking around signaling to the world that they are ready to take it up their asses and too stupid to know it.

In other words, you took a few sources, tried to connect the dots via politics, added in your own special brand of xenophobia, mixed in a few homophobic slurs and pooped out this "you have to look it up yourself" admission that you are pretty much making up any direct connection.

We can always count on you for some good laughs. Keep up the good work.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?


Then why are there so many blacks incarcerated? Way beyond their percentage of the US population.

That is a good question. Most of the legal disadvantages for whites are not in criminal law but in tort law, civil rights law and the quota / set aside system of laws that cross the country.

Blacks are being encouraged by the corporate media to act thuggish, ruin their careers with drug convictions and take on behaviors that most people associate with criminality.

Many of the investors that own large chunks of the Hip Hop industry also own private prisons.

Connect the dots, dude.

Who are these investors. Their names please.


Private Prison Industry Profits from Rap Music ColorBlind Me

In the early 1980’s before all of these rappers emerged in the scene, a lot of prison institutions converted from being publicly-funded businesses to private organizations supported by powerful investors of large corporations. Investors derived from industries such as media, music, finance and many more. During this conversion, a rather glamorous business opportunity surfaced, one that would attract major profit for each investor.
Scholars have identified this conversion as the prison industrial complex, which accounts for the increase in prison inmates in order to increase the amount of contracted work for a greater profit. In fact, this billion-dollar industry has been successful in creating thousands of new prison establishments over the last two decades. With more prison establishments warrants more inmates and bigger spending budgets for these private investors.
Coincidentally, during the conversion of public to private prisons, the hip-hop music industry endured a large transformation as well. Prior to the Wayne era, rap and hip-hop music used to be trademarked for its playful and innovative contribution to music. With notorious figures such as Sugarhill Gang, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa and more, hip-hop was a reflection of stylized music that embodied elements of “DJing,” “MCing,” break dancing and “beat-boxing.” Now, hip-hop or rap music rather, mirrors the sounds and lyrics of the “gangsta” lifestyle. With lyrics centered on guns, drug usage and violence, these new hardcore rappers have transformed hip-hop from innocent fun to potential danger.
During a time when the need for more inmates increased, it seems more than a coincidence that rap music would transform into a lifestyle or music medium that evoked violence. As one of the most influential genres of music, “Why would the rap image, as this new and ‘cool’ product reflect a gangster or criminal lifestyle?”
According to the Atlantic Monthly, “Since 1991, the rate of violent crime in the US has fallen by 20% while the number of people in prison or jail has risen by 50%.”
While criminal activity has not been as threatening, still new prisons are continuing to arise, which further requires more inmates in order for the prison industry to sustain as a profitable business. Marketing officials and investors seemed to find an answer to this dilemma with no problem. I mean with the rap industry already thriving well beyond anticipated success, it would only be a matter of time before fans and consumers would personify the associated images of such a cool type of music and lifestyle.
So, those of you, who enjoy the music of Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz, Rick Ross and more, please be careful to distinguish between their imagery and their actual music. With respect to marketing and brand management officials, it is no surprise that targeting ages 9 to 25 will increase the profitability of a product considering our generation is the most influential in the consumer market. By continuing to project and emulate these images of rap artists, listeners and fans are putting money into the pockets of these investors who thrive within this billion-dollar industry.

Who are the biggest investors getting rich off the private prison industry:
Who s Getting Rich off the Prison-Industrial Complex VICE United States
Matt Sirovich and Jeremy Mindich both donate to Democratic politicians and are involved with progressive-leaning organizations like Root Capital, a nonprofit lending company that offers loans to farmers in developing countries to alleviate poverty.
Their day job, however, is running Scopia Capital, a hedge fund that is the one of the largest shareholders of GEO Group. The fund owns about $300 million in shares in that company, which represents 12 percent of its entire portfolio. Like Zoley, they are good at what they do—their fund outperformed the market by 20 percentage points, and the State of New Jersey hired Scopia to manage $150 million worth of pensions....

Democratic party is totally fine with the incarceration rate. Although Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan are largely responsible for the drug-war policies that caused the prison population to skyrocket, Bill Clinton was a “tough on crime” president who continued their ideas. And Vice President Joe Biden was a principal player in the Clinton era’s crime policies—he wrote the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which, among other things, called for $9.7 billion in increased funding for prisons and stiffer penalties for drug offenders.
Though the US prison population is shrinking slightly, the number of inmates in federal lockup is increasing, and while Obama keeps saying he’s ending the war on drugs, he’s also proposed budgets that call for increasing the amount of money spent on the Bureau of Prisons. So it’s not such a stretch that a Democratic donor would also be in the men-in-cages industry....

Oh, yes and likely you as well if you have a 401k plan.

Secret Meeting Created Gangsta Rap Helped Private Prisons

The subject quickly changed as the speaker went on to tell us that the respective companies we represented had invested in a very profitable industry which could become even more rewarding with our active involvement. He explained that the companies we work for had invested millions into the building of privately owned prisons and that our positions of influence in the music industry would actually impact the profitability of these investments. I remember many of us in the group immediately looking at each other in confusion. At the time, I didn’t know what a private prison was but I wasn’t the only one. Sure enough, someone asked what these prisons were and what any of this had to do with us. We were told that these prisons were built by privately owned companies who received funding from the government based on the number of inmates. The more inmates, the more money the government would pay these prisons. It was also made clear to us that since these prisons are privately owned, as they become publicly traded, we’d be able to buy shares. Most of us were taken back by this. Again, a couple of people asked what this had to do with us. At this point, my industry colleague who had first opened the meeting took the floor again and answered our questions. He told us that since our employers had become silent investors in this prison business, it was now in their interest to make sure that these prisons remained filled. Our job would be to help make this happen by marketing music which promotes criminal behavior, rap being the music of choice. He assured us that this would be a great situation for us because rap music was becoming an increasingly profitable market for our companies, and as employee, we’d also be able to buy personal stocks in these prisons. Immediately, silence came over the room. You could have heard a pin drop. I remember looking around to make sure I wasn’t dreaming and saw half of the people with dropped jaws. My daze was interrupted when someone shouted, “Is this a f****** joke?” At this point things became chaotic. Two of the men who were part of the “unfamiliar” group grabbed the man who shouted out and attempted to remove him from the house. A few of us, myself included, tried to intervene. One of them pulled out a gun and we all backed off. They separated us from the crowd and all four of us were escorted outside. My industry colleague who had opened the meeting earlier hurried out to meet us and reminded us that we had signed agreement and would suffer the consequences of speaking about this publicly or even with those who attended the meeting. I asked him why he was involved with something this corrupt and he replied that it was bigger than the music business and nothing we’d want to challenge without risking consequences. We all protested and as he walked back into the house I remember word for word the last thing he said, “It’s out of my hands now. Remember you signed an agreement.” He then closed the door behind him.

The Secret Meeting that Changed Rap Music and Destroyed a Generation Hip Hop Is Read

If you want specific name, then you have to look that up yourself. These investors are into many different forms of business and many of them are invested in both private prisons and rap music (as well as country music, etc.) BUT the decision to turn rap into a gangster format was made early on as a business decision by some who owned investments in both private prisons and rap music specifically.

And it has ripped the hell out of the black community, the result of a slow burn thinly veiled genocide against and enslavement of blacks. It is also ironic how this style of wearing pants low came about. It originated in prions where it was a signal from a sexual partner that plays 'catcher' that he is ready for another sexual encounter. It is amazing to see all these big 'tough' guys walking around signaling to the world that they are ready to take it up their asses and too stupid to know it.

In other words, you took a few sources, tried to connect the dots via politics, added in your own special brand of xenophobia, mixed in a few homophobic slurs and pooped out this "you have to look it up yourself" admission that you are pretty much making up any direct connection.

We can always count on you for some good laughs. Keep up the good work.
good ole jim blowme the best example of how our lives could be as fucked up as his.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?

As usual, you offer no proof.

lol, you need proof that we have Affirmative Action based laws that give racial set asides in contracts with most governments, especially the federal government? You need proof that there are racial quotas, college slots available for specific races or goals for races that EXCLUDE whites?

Lol then you are too ignorant and stupid to bother with, having not watched the news in 5 decades.

Just your usual bullshit.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?


Then why are there so many blacks incarcerated? Way beyond their percentage of the US population.

That is a good question. Most of the legal disadvantages for whites are not in criminal law but in tort law, civil rights law and the quota / set aside system of laws that cross the country.

Blacks are being encouraged by the corporate media to act thuggish, ruin their careers with drug convictions and take on behaviors that most people associate with criminality.

Many of the investors that own large chunks of the Hip Hop industry also own private prisons.

Connect the dots, dude.

Who are these investors. Their names please.


Private Prison Industry Profits from Rap Music ColorBlind Me

In the early 1980’s before all of these rappers emerged in the scene, a lot of prison institutions converted from being publicly-funded businesses to private organizations supported by powerful investors of large corporations. Investors derived from industries such as media, music, finance and many more. During this conversion, a rather glamorous business opportunity surfaced, one that would attract major profit for each investor.
Scholars have identified this conversion as the prison industrial complex, which accounts for the increase in prison inmates in order to increase the amount of contracted work for a greater profit. In fact, this billion-dollar industry has been successful in creating thousands of new prison establishments over the last two decades. With more prison establishments warrants more inmates and bigger spending budgets for these private investors.
Coincidentally, during the conversion of public to private prisons, the hip-hop music industry endured a large transformation as well. Prior to the Wayne era, rap and hip-hop music used to be trademarked for its playful and innovative contribution to music. With notorious figures such as Sugarhill Gang, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa and more, hip-hop was a reflection of stylized music that embodied elements of “DJing,” “MCing,” break dancing and “beat-boxing.” Now, hip-hop or rap music rather, mirrors the sounds and lyrics of the “gangsta” lifestyle. With lyrics centered on guns, drug usage and violence, these new hardcore rappers have transformed hip-hop from innocent fun to potential danger.
During a time when the need for more inmates increased, it seems more than a coincidence that rap music would transform into a lifestyle or music medium that evoked violence. As one of the most influential genres of music, “Why would the rap image, as this new and ‘cool’ product reflect a gangster or criminal lifestyle?”
According to the Atlantic Monthly, “Since 1991, the rate of violent crime in the US has fallen by 20% while the number of people in prison or jail has risen by 50%.”
While criminal activity has not been as threatening, still new prisons are continuing to arise, which further requires more inmates in order for the prison industry to sustain as a profitable business. Marketing officials and investors seemed to find an answer to this dilemma with no problem. I mean with the rap industry already thriving well beyond anticipated success, it would only be a matter of time before fans and consumers would personify the associated images of such a cool type of music and lifestyle.
So, those of you, who enjoy the music of Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz, Rick Ross and more, please be careful to distinguish between their imagery and their actual music. With respect to marketing and brand management officials, it is no surprise that targeting ages 9 to 25 will increase the profitability of a product considering our generation is the most influential in the consumer market. By continuing to project and emulate these images of rap artists, listeners and fans are putting money into the pockets of these investors who thrive within this billion-dollar industry.

Who are the biggest investors getting rich off the private prison industry:
Who s Getting Rich off the Prison-Industrial Complex VICE United States
Matt Sirovich and Jeremy Mindich both donate to Democratic politicians and are involved with progressive-leaning organizations like Root Capital, a nonprofit lending company that offers loans to farmers in developing countries to alleviate poverty.
Their day job, however, is running Scopia Capital, a hedge fund that is the one of the largest shareholders of GEO Group. The fund owns about $300 million in shares in that company, which represents 12 percent of its entire portfolio. Like Zoley, they are good at what they do—their fund outperformed the market by 20 percentage points, and the State of New Jersey hired Scopia to manage $150 million worth of pensions....

Democratic party is totally fine with the incarceration rate. Although Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan are largely responsible for the drug-war policies that caused the prison population to skyrocket, Bill Clinton was a “tough on crime” president who continued their ideas. And Vice President Joe Biden was a principal player in the Clinton era’s crime policies—he wrote the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which, among other things, called for $9.7 billion in increased funding for prisons and stiffer penalties for drug offenders.
Though the US prison population is shrinking slightly, the number of inmates in federal lockup is increasing, and while Obama keeps saying he’s ending the war on drugs, he’s also proposed budgets that call for increasing the amount of money spent on the Bureau of Prisons. So it’s not such a stretch that a Democratic donor would also be in the men-in-cages industry....

Oh, yes and likely you as well if you have a 401k plan.

Secret Meeting Created Gangsta Rap Helped Private Prisons

The subject quickly changed as the speaker went on to tell us that the respective companies we represented had invested in a very profitable industry which could become even more rewarding with our active involvement. He explained that the companies we work for had invested millions into the building of privately owned prisons and that our positions of influence in the music industry would actually impact the profitability of these investments. I remember many of us in the group immediately looking at each other in confusion. At the time, I didn’t know what a private prison was but I wasn’t the only one. Sure enough, someone asked what these prisons were and what any of this had to do with us. We were told that these prisons were built by privately owned companies who received funding from the government based on the number of inmates. The more inmates, the more money the government would pay these prisons. It was also made clear to us that since these prisons are privately owned, as they become publicly traded, we’d be able to buy shares. Most of us were taken back by this. Again, a couple of people asked what this had to do with us. At this point, my industry colleague who had first opened the meeting took the floor again and answered our questions. He told us that since our employers had become silent investors in this prison business, it was now in their interest to make sure that these prisons remained filled. Our job would be to help make this happen by marketing music which promotes criminal behavior, rap being the music of choice. He assured us that this would be a great situation for us because rap music was becoming an increasingly profitable market for our companies, and as employee, we’d also be able to buy personal stocks in these prisons. Immediately, silence came over the room. You could have heard a pin drop. I remember looking around to make sure I wasn’t dreaming and saw half of the people with dropped jaws. My daze was interrupted when someone shouted, “Is this a f****** joke?” At this point things became chaotic. Two of the men who were part of the “unfamiliar” group grabbed the man who shouted out and attempted to remove him from the house. A few of us, myself included, tried to intervene. One of them pulled out a gun and we all backed off. They separated us from the crowd and all four of us were escorted outside. My industry colleague who had opened the meeting earlier hurried out to meet us and reminded us that we had signed agreement and would suffer the consequences of speaking about this publicly or even with those who attended the meeting. I asked him why he was involved with something this corrupt and he replied that it was bigger than the music business and nothing we’d want to challenge without risking consequences. We all protested and as he walked back into the house I remember word for word the last thing he said, “It’s out of my hands now. Remember you signed an agreement.” He then closed the door behind him.

The Secret Meeting that Changed Rap Music and Destroyed a Generation Hip Hop Is Read

If you want specific name, then you have to look that up yourself. These investors are into many different forms of business and many of them are invested in both private prisons and rap music (as well as country music, etc.) BUT the decision to turn rap into a gangster format was made early on as a business decision by some who owned investments in both private prisons and rap music specifically.

And it has ripped the hell out of the black community, the result of a slow burn thinly veiled genocide against and enslavement of blacks. It is also ironic how this style of wearing pants low came about. It originated in prions where it was a signal from a sexual partner that plays 'catcher' that he is ready for another sexual encounter. It is amazing to see all these big 'tough' guys walking around signaling to the world that they are ready to take it up their asses and too stupid to know it.

In other words, you took a few sources, tried to connect the dots via politics, added in your own special brand of xenophobia, mixed in a few homophobic slurs and pooped out this "you have to look it up yourself" admission that you are pretty much making up any direct connection.

We can always count on you for some good laughs. Keep up the good work.

Yeah, we all know how you fascists find innocent people being slaughtered to be so hilarious.

These FACTs still stand, and it is absurd to demand a list of each and every investor to support my point. Any open minded person can see where and who benefits by the current environment.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?

As usual, you offer no proof.

lol, you need proof that we have Affirmative Action based laws that give racial set asides in contracts with most governments, especially the federal government? You need proof that there are racial quotas, college slots available for specific races or goals for races that EXCLUDE whites?

Lol then you are too ignorant and stupid to bother with, having not watched the news in 5 decades.

Just your usual bullshit.

No, I give facts and tie them together with listed reasons.

YOU are the one who tossing out the bullshit 99% of the time, like your more concerned about padding your post count than saying anything that has any fucking meaning at all.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?

As usual, you offer no proof.

lol, you need proof that we have Affirmative Action based laws that give racial set asides in contracts with most governments, especially the federal government? You need proof that there are racial quotas, college slots available for specific races or goals for races that EXCLUDE whites?

Lol then you are too ignorant and stupid to bother with, having not watched the news in 5 decades.

Just your usual bullshit.

No, I give facts and tie them together with listed reasons.

YOU are the one who tossing out the bullshit 99% of the time, like your more concerned about padding your post count than saying anything that has any fucking meaning at all.

You confuse facts and opinions. I could give a shit about post count, that is for insecure little men like yourself.
 
Do white people have a Constitutional right to equal standing in a court of law?

You may think we do, but the FACT is that we DO NOT have equal standing in a court of law.

Affirmative Action laws, racial set aside laws, college and university quota systems they now call goals, the presumption of innocence like when Zimmerman got charged for a crime after due process left him uncharged until racist provocateurs got involved, and now we have the GOVENOR of the STATE OF MISSOURI calling for the indictment of a white police officer for shooting a black criminal in self defense and the whole controversy initiated by racist provocateurs. The legal system now takes race into account AGAINST whites and we no longer have equal standing in our own courts, and it has been getting worse over the last four decades.

Why aren't whites given equal standing in our courts of law? Don't we have the Constitutional right to equal standing?

As usual, you offer no proof.

lol, you need proof that we have Affirmative Action based laws that give racial set asides in contracts with most governments, especially the federal government? You need proof that there are racial quotas, college slots available for specific races or goals for races that EXCLUDE whites?

Lol then you are too ignorant and stupid to bother with, having not watched the news in 5 decades.

Just your usual bullshit.

No, I give facts and tie them together with listed reasons.

YOU are the one who tossing out the bullshit 99% of the time, like your more concerned about padding your post count than saying anything that has any fucking meaning at all.

You confuse facts and opinions. I could give a shit about post count, that is for insecure little men like yourself.

It is NOT an opinion that we have racial set asides in contract law. That is a FACT, you fucking liar.
 
About the prisons for profit. You probably know many of them have contracts with government that guarantee a certain percentage of prisoners, (customers actually.) This in itself should be questioned. City and country governments will naturally increase prosecutions to send "customers" to these prisons. Getting back to the white/black criminal numbers, what better place to shop for future prisoners than the black communities.

Yes, and as a recent study found, the private prisons get to pick which prisoners they want, and of course take only the healthier and younger ones, leaving the expensive prisoners in the state prisons.
 
lol, you need proof that we have Affirmative Action based laws that give racial set asides in contracts with most governments, especially the federal government? You need proof that there are racial quotas, college slots available for specific races or goals for races that EXCLUDE whites?

Lol then you are too ignorant and stupid to bother with, having not watched the news in 5 decades.

Yes, it's more than mildly retarded for anybody to claim otherwise. Ignore the trolls, especially the ignorant and clueless ones.

As an aside, the same big corporations that profit off of the private prisons are also cashing in on housing the recent waves of illegal alien children in their hotels and compounds. I'll see if I can find the story again; it listed many of the investors and their shell companies.
 
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